Chiwocha_2009_Plant.Sci_177_252

Reference

Title : Karrikins: A New Family of Plant Growth Regulators in Smoke - Chiwocha_2009_Plant.Sci_177_252
Author(s) : Chiwocha SDS , Dixon KW , Flematti GR , Ghisalberti EL , Merritt DJ , Nelson DC , Riseborough JAM , Smith SM , Stevens JC
Ref : Plant Sci , 177 :252 , 2009
Abstract :

Karrikins are a chemically defined family of plant growth regulators discovered in smoke from burning plant material. Karrikins are potent in breaking dormancy of seeds of many species adapted to environments that regularly experience fire and smoke. The recent discovery that karrikins trigger seed germination and control seedling growth in taxa that would rarely experience fire indicates that their significance could extend far beyond fire ecology. This is exemplified by new studies showing that seeds of Arabidopsis thaliana respond sensitively and specifically to karrikins in smoke. These exciting discoveries might be explained if karrikins are produced in the environment by processes other than fire, such as by chemical or microbial degradation of vegetation in response to disturbance of the soil or removal of the plant canopy. Another hypothesis is that plants contain endogenous karrikins that function naturally in the control of seed germination and that species from fire-prone habitats have evolved to respond also to exogenous karrikins. A variant on this hypothesis is that karrikins mimic endogenous plant hormones such as terpenoids that control seed germination. The evidence for these hypotheses is discussed, but whatever the explanation karrikins are now firmly established as an important family of naturally occurring plant growth regulators.

PubMedSearch : Chiwocha_2009_Plant.Sci_177_252
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Related information

Substrate Karrikin-4    Karrikin-3    Karrikin-2    Karrikin-1

Citations formats

Chiwocha SDS, Dixon KW, Flematti GR, Ghisalberti EL, Merritt DJ, Nelson DC, Riseborough JAM, Smith SM, Stevens JC (2009)
Karrikins: A New Family of Plant Growth Regulators in Smoke
Plant Sci 177 :252

Chiwocha SDS, Dixon KW, Flematti GR, Ghisalberti EL, Merritt DJ, Nelson DC, Riseborough JAM, Smith SM, Stevens JC (2009)
Plant Sci 177 :252